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Monday, April 11, 2011

On Saturday, Louie was kind enough to take Marge and I to a brand new trial site about an hour and a half away in Yaphank, Long Island. Marge was coming off of a great weekend and I was confident that we'd pick up our first Excellent qualifying score (in either class).

Standard was first, and I LOVED the course.

We got out there and it was apparent that Marge was ready to go. She fired through the weaves. She completed the teeter (and heeded my instructions to wait in the middle while I front crossed). She climbed the A-Frame quickly and moved across my feet in to the tunnel underneath it. She got on the table and stayed put.

After the table, though, things got a bit funky.

First, she swung wide when she got off the table (which might have had to do with my positioning). She fixed that and turned tightly over the double, but nearly bypassed the chute (hard to tell in the video). She took the bar jump and was in perfect position to get on the dog walk.. but didn't.

It took three tries, including one moment where Marge decided to jump OVER the dog walk plank rather than execute the obstacle correctly.

Finally, she got on the dog walk.. but then leapt from the middle of the last plank, missing the contact completely, and took off for the final jump, which stopped the time and NT'd us.

My knee jerk reaction was to yell "HEY!!" at her (which I do not condone doing) .. not because I was mad at her for goofing up the agility (I wasn't), but because I was afraid she would exit the ring and go on a jaunt in the corn field behind us. I then called her to come, and we finished the last two obstacles in the order that they were intended to be completed.

My personal feeling is that something stressed her at the table (maybe the table itself), but others who saw don't agree and think that she was just goofing. Either way, I'm not terribly concerned (yet) because this was a new site and a longer course than she's used to (Open has less numbers), but this does make the second time where Marge has had dog walk trouble (not counting her slip last week, where she still held on to hit the contact) this year.

We had a longer wait than I anticipated until our next class, Excellent Jumpers with Weaves.

We walked around the site a bit. I liked the site quite a bit, but there must be some shooting range or something nearby, because I kept hearing gun shots. Marge heard them, too - she wasn't horribly scared by them but they definitely made her a bit uneasy. This, unfortunately, truncated our walk time (I would have loved to go on a longer walk). I'm not sure if I'll trial here again.

Romping around the site

Listening to the gunshots in the distance - scared me, too!

Our neighbors, next to where we set up. It was great to be set up next to good friends.

Hanging out ringside.

It came time for me to walk Excellent Jumpers. I was so flustered during the walk through because of the large number of people in the ring. Guess this is what I'll be putting up with for the rest of Marge's agility career.

The course was hard. It was the first course that we've run in competition that was really completely ill-suited to rear crosses. That means I would have to front cross, which really took me out of my comfort zone. I did not think we would do well.

But, we did! We got through the hardest parts of the course with minimal difficulty. Marge got some nice distance and I was able to front cross with no problem.

However, she did have a run-out at the second jump due to her snooter being on the ground, and a refusal after the weaves. I'm going to chalk those up to baby dog/new trial site mistakes and not worry too much about it. If she was very stressed, I don't think she would have read my front crosses (since I almost never use them).

So, no Q's to show for the day, but Marge definitely had some moments of brilliance. She's not going off course, she's not really running zoomies or anything.. so over all, I think she's handling the transition to Excellent very nicely. And all of our runs this year, so far, have been NICE runs, whether they are Q's or NQ's. Nothing like the crazy stuff that we had going on at the end of last year. Fingers crossed that it stays this way.

Our next trial is not for almost a month, at a park near our house. Removing transit time from the equation has been helpful for us in the past, and my familiarity with the site usually makes me more comfortable, too. I just know we will pick up our first Excellent leg then!

We ended the day with a trip to Louie's house. He had to pick something up from his parents, and it was on the way home. Marge met Louie's parents and did fabulously with them. It was really cool to see her relatively comfortable in a strange place that had NOTHING to do with dog events. We stood outside the front door and chatted for a while, then went home and passed out on the couch. It was a long day!

16
comments:

That Standard course looks fun! It looks like it has a really nice flow to it.

Sorry about the dog walk - I have no ideas or suggestions. But like I said, I do have ring rentals if you ever want to practice her on "new" equipment. It's probably an hour and a half away for you, but it's outdoors and private.

You're right, you'll get the Q's at Wolfe's Pond! (And not to sound selfish but I hope I'm there too!)

PS~ I had to laugh at you "hey"ing Marge. I "hey" Layla often, because my dad does it, and so my brother and I do too. My dad likes to sneak up on us and shout HEY at the top of his lungs. Since he has a very deep voice, it scares the shit out of you. Or if your window is open, he'll sneak around the outside of the house to do it. He's got a weird sense of humor like that, but it's become it's own verb - to "hey" someone. Anyway, I do use it sparingly on Layla because I remember it being terrifying, even if I'm not trying to scare her. It's very effective though - definitely gets someone to listen to you!

Were you nervous? Maybe Marge was picking up on that if you were...do you have a touch cue for the dog walk for her 2020? Breeze gets excited enough and going fast enough she will totally leap past contacts if I dont remind her. To me it looks like she is having a blast and just needs to remember it is a team sport, LOL, and you will give her the course, I am sure she has even better ideas for a course, but.... I thought it could be a touch of zoomies from stress, but mostly it just looked to me like she is just figureing out all the rules. Good job you guys, you guys are really coming together so nicely, it is very exciting to see.

After watching the video, I feel like my voice was really harsh throughout the entire course, so maybe I was nervous. But yes, Marge does have a 2o2o.. I told her "zone" which is her word as she was coming down the ramp, but she just sped up and leapt it.

I'm happy that the Jumpers run came afterwards, because although we had a couple of goofs, they weren't anything like what happened at the end of the Standard course.

Your runs look great!! I couldnt see you in the first approach to the DW but the second time your body and motion cued your dog not to take the dogwalk, she went the way you cued. So I wouldnt worry about the dogwalk. You guys looked great!

Given the circumstances, Marge did awesomely!!! I could hear dogs barking almost continuously during your runs, and I actually wondered if it distracted Marge because she drifted when she got closer to the dog sounds.

But, all in all, she looked really happy, like she was having fun. That's what's most important!

I'd say that the fact that she handled meeting Louie's parents at the end of a long day of agility so very well speaks to the fact that she wasn't stressed out. That's great!

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About MargeBlog

MargeBlog started in early 2009 as a training journal for my newly adopted, skittish Lab mix, Marge. Marge's world was small back then; her fears really limited the things I could do with her. Aside from trips to the park and attending beginner training classes, Marge was mostly a stay at home gal - not because either of us wanted her to be, just because the demons from her unsuitable upbringing continued to haunt her.

Slowly, the fear diminished, her world grew. Now, Marge is a fun-loving, squirrel-chasing, winning Agility and Rally dog who accompanies me to a wide variety of places. Here, you will frequently find detailed training updates, snippets from Marge's every day life at home, and photo-filled posts detailing our many outdoor adventures.

This is more than just a dog blog - it is an actual look in to what one shelter dog's life ultimately became when she found her first and forever home and began to blossom.

About Marge

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A rescue from Georgia bounced around from shelter to shelter and state to state with her siblings, Marge did not have the luxury of living in a home - my home - until just past her first birthday. A life behind bars had taken its toll on Marge, whose obvious fear of people, noise, and city life in general left a lot for her to learn about how to get by in New York.

Marge is a different dog now than she was back then. It took years of new, positive life experiences, but her fears, which used to consume everything we did, are now only one theme in a great big book of adventures.

These days, Marge enjoys going to training classes, taking trips to agility trials, having play dates with friends, and eating anything that's even remotely edible - not bad for a dog who spent her puppy days in cages.

My time with Marge has been a learning experience for which I am ever grateful. As my first dog, she has taught me and continues to teach me so much more than I ever imagined about dogs, training, and behavioral/fear issues. She's a fun dog with a sense of humor who loves life and learning.